vulchor: I do indeed, but it has an overdrive chip in it making it effectively a very low-end 486sx, IIRC.
My first computer was an 8086 with CGA graphics that I could play QBert on that my dad had gotten for free from his work when they upgraded (it was already practically worthless when we got it in 1993), but before we owned that beauty, my best friend had an Apple IIg and that's what I learned to program BASIC on when I was in 3rd or 4th grade.
Then, in early 1994, my dad made the plunge and bought a brand new 486dx 33mHz from Gateway 2000. I was hooked on PCs with that machine. A couple years later, my friend was throwing out that 286 I mentioned, so I took it off his hands and still have it. I still have my 486, however it is now upgraded to a DX2 and can play Diablo!
I have the unique luxury of being head of IT for my job, so I have a computer grave yard in my office (so my wife couldn't throw the stuff out).
But you, my friend, had an Amiga! The creme de la creme of gaming machines from the early 90s! Do you happen to still have it? I have always been so jealous of people that got to grow up with Amigas.
I had 2 of them(bought a friend's one in the late 90s cheap) and unfortunately they were stored at my mother's house and she threw them out. I've used emulation since but it just isn't the same!
An Apple 2G was fancy stuff! BASIC eh?
10 PRINT "The computer teacher is an idiot who knows nothing about computing"
20 GOTO 10
Was something I loaded on every single Apple computer in the lab in 1989 and the poor teacher got so upset because he didn't know how to stop them all looping, so I stopped it. That little exercise in puerility had me become the computer class monitor who taught more than he did lol
I planned on doing IT stuff for life until I realised I wanted to be outdoors and keep computers to being recreational only. It look me a while to realise that after learning hardware, software, a little programming and website design.
Erufian: *snip*
In my opinion each person needs to evaluate the tradeoffs and decide what they prefer (and different people will place different value on the good and bad points in each option), what is important is to choose with your eyes open and understanding what you're getting and what you aren't.
I do hope GOG continues to improve the selection of available games (and that most people behave correctly so that manufacturers get less paranoid about unlicensed use) and I also hope GOG continues to improve the toolset (downloader/installers/updaters, etc) to make it as convenient as possible.
I snipped your post as to not take up so much space but just wanted to say that I agree wholeheartedly with pretty much everything you said, especially the first part after I snipped it :)
A very well thought out, calm and rational post :)
Tarnicus: You mean
"What do you get when you multiply six by nine?" isn't the right question? :P
LoboBlanco: The moment I realized I needed to sleep was right when I landed in this thread, read that question and thought the answer to that was "A messy face" :P
Oooookay I need to sleep.
LMFAO! Great to come back to this thread and read that. Synchronisitically at about the exact same time you wrote that, I was in the car with my girlfriend's father and we were talking about passwords and how a lack of sleep affects my almost eidetic memory for numbers and mentioned the time when I once forgot my PIN. Since then I locked a phrase in my head that would have me NEVER forget it again, and that phrase to tell me what my number is "A 69 going down". The universe is an hilarious place indeed :)